Name

Uwe Rösler



Thumb
Player Thumbnail
Image Source Creative Commons logo

User Rating
(0 users)
Data Complete 70%
15%

Born
1968 (57 years old)
Shiny National flag Altenburg, Germany

Position
Manager

Status
Active

Ethnicity
White

Team Number


Height
185 cm

Outfitter

Kit
Wage Year

Player Cutout
No Cutout thumb

Archive


Full Body Render
Player render

Sport
Player sport icon Soccer

Team
AGF Aarhus

2nd Team


League
Danish Superliga

Creative Commons Artwork
Creative Commons logo Yes


Description English Flag icon

Uwe Rösler (German pronunciation: ; born 15 November 1968) is a German football manager and former professional footballer.

As a player he was a centre forward, notably playing in the Premier League for Manchester City, where he was the leading goalscorer for three consecutive seasons from 1994-95 to 1996-97, and in the Bundesliga for 1. FC Nürnberg and 1. FC Kaiserslautern, he played in the UEFA Champions League with the latter. He also played Premier League football for Southampton and in the Football League for West Bromwich Albion and in Norway for Lillestrøm. Back in his native Germany he also represented 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig, BSG Chemie Leipzig, 1. FC Magdeburg, Dynamo Dresden, Tennis Borussia Berlin and SpVgg Unterhaching. He is a former East Germany international, whom he represented in the under-21 team and five times as a senior.

In 2004, he began his managerial career with Lillestrøm in Norway, and later led Viking and Molde FK in Tippeligaen. He also managed Brentford, Wigan Athletic, Leeds United and Fleetwood Town in the English Football League, as well as Malmö FF in Allsvenskan and most recently Fortuna Düsseldorf.

Rösler made his debut for East Germany on 26 January 1990 in a 2–1 win over Kuwait. He appeared in the team's final match against Belgium on 12 September 1990, 21 days before German reunification. Overall, Rösler was capped five times, scoring no goals. He also represented East Germany U21s at international level.

Born and brought up in East Germany as the communist regime was collapsing, during his time at Lokomotive Leipzig, Rösler was interviewed by the Stasi secret police organisation, who attempted to force him to inform on colleagues seeking to defect to the West in exchange for the Stasi allowing him to continue his fledgling football career unimpeded – only the furious intervention of his manager saved him from their attentions.

Having been a fan of English football from his childhood, Rösler said that he found his "home" in England during his time with Manchester City, and described the formation of his bond with the City fans as the "biggest achievement in my career". Diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2003, he credited his recovery to the support of the fans of the club, and said that hearing them sing his name at a game while he lay in hospital made his bond with the club "unbreakable". Rösler has stated on several occasions that his ambition for his managerial career is to eventually become manager of the Manchester club.

Rösler has a Norwegian wife, with whom he has had two sons. His younger son is named Colin after Colin Bell, and is a professional footballer for Lillestrøm, while his eldest son is named Tony after Tony Book – both Bell and Book are former Manchester City players, both considered club legends.

In 2013, Rösler's autobiography Knocking Down Walls was released.
wiki icon creative commons icon

0 goals scored in the current 2025-2026 Season


Trophies search icon


Milestones

Milestone Art icon

UEFA Champions League…
1998-12-09



Former Youth Teams search icon
Former Youth team icon
1981-1987


Former Senior Teams search icon
Former team badge icon
1987-1988
Former team badge icon
1988-1989
Former team badge icon
1989-1990
Former team badge icon
1990
Former team badge icon
1991-1992
Former team badge icon
1992-1994
Former team badge icon
1993-1994 (Loan)
Former team badge icon
1994-1998
Former team badge icon
1998-1999
Former team badge icon
1999-2000
Former team badge icon
2000-2002
Former team badge icon
2001 (Loan)
Former team badge icon
2002
Former team badge icon
2002-2003


Former Club Staff search icon
Former Manager Team Icon
2005-2006
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2007-2009
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2010-2010
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2011-2013
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2013-2014
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2015-2015
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2016-2018
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2018-2019
Manager
Former Manager Team Icon
2020-2021
Manager


Contracts search icon



Fanart search icon
no fanartno fanartno fanartno fanart

Player Poster
No Poster thumb

Banner



News Reports
None found...

Collections
None found...


Statistics search icon
None Found...


Other Links
Wikidata Icon
WikiData